Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 27, 1883, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Ffi your Life Worth a Dollar? Perhaps that seems a high price for it, considering how poor your blood is, and how your whole system is rostrated, debilitated, and enfeebled. 'eople have been heard to say, under such circumstances, that they would not give the toss of a copper for the choice between life and death. But gwhen it comes to actually drawing near the grave,a man naturally draws back, and says he does not want to die. Life is very precious, and even to a broken-down man it is worth saving. One dollar will buy a bottle of Brown's Iron Bitters. Thatone dol- lar may start you on the road from misery te recovery. A man must take a very mean view of himselfwho is not willing to invest that much in making one serious effort to rescue 1|imscl¥ from deadly debility, and to step into the enjoyment of solid health, ZBrown's Iron Bitlers vital- izes the blood, tones the nerves, and rebuilds the system. Its work is well known. fn\'cst that dollar in a libaalh is Wealth! (7 3% Wrst's Nenye AND Brars ) wENT, n guaranteod specifio for Hysterin, Di Conynlsions, ¥its, Norvous Netralgin, oho, Nervous Prostration caused by th of aloohol or tobaoco, Wakofulnoss, Mental Do- progsion, Hoftening of the Brain resulting in in- eanity nhd leading to misery, decay and death, Premnturo Old Ago, Barrconiess, Lows of powor in oithor sex, Involuntary Losscs and Bpormat- orrhan cansed by over-oxartion of the brain, self- abuso o oversindulgence, ch box contains ono month's treatment. box, or receipt of price, fund the money if the treatmont doos not eff¢ aoure. Gusrantes issued only by DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE. JOR EITHER SEX. Th' remedy belng Infeotod dircotly to the soat 0ue icese, roqulires no chango of diet OF nauseous, @ - =1blor poisonous medicines to be taken intern- ‘ * 15ed as a preventive by elthor sox, it ls o, - contrack any private diseaso; but In the “use of thoos already unfortunatoly afflioted wo gusr- Aakes thrve boxes bo oure, or we wil refuud the /monoy, mail, postage paid, §2 por box, or hroo boxes for §6. o SWRITTEN GUARANTEES wsued by all authorized agents. Dr.FelixLeBrun&Co SOLE PROPRIETORR. 'C. F. Goodman, Druggist, Sole Agent, for Omaha Nt vih Cailrdiin J.P. WEBER & CO, MANUFACTURERS OF BRACES! t | time Gen, Custer was killed. We camped oY TiERcORRECTIONzOF . Physical Deformities, Hip and Spinal Diseases, Club Feet, Stift,Knees,! Bow Legs, Knock’Knees, &c. TRUSSES . ho best make kopt on band, Truses roggired, Orut:hes mado to order. Smail jobs of ali¥kinds dono in Steel, Iron and Wood, &4rRepairing of all kinds d ne neat, cheap and prompt. Fist premium given our work st the Ne: rasks State Fair of 1853, 803 Sou h Tenth St,, Omaha. FOR SALE. PRINTER'S INIK A Rare Chance for Printing Offices Wo have for ssle soveral barrels of a firt quality of printing Ink. Being made for use on sialler or slower pressos than wo are now using, ‘we will sol) tho samo at 57 cents per pound froe on Dboard cars at Omaha. Will guaranteo it to give good satlstaction on amaller aud medium prosses. I BEE PUBLISHING CO EACATE T $00 OTUKL BIZKS. _Hedured RICH LIVT PAkk. FORGHS, TOOLS, &o. 5 PEST FOIGL B, 1, A L Bt Vouraie Beur Co, Magsaans, Mica BURJ o Belb 0. 1 W aaningion 3., b, 1 THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA I'UESDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1883, A FRONTIER CAREER. Death at His Ranch in Wyoming of “Portngese” Phillips, the In- dian Scont, The News Which He Bore to the Outside World of the Fet= terman Massacre. Fort Phil, Kearney and the Howling Redskinsg Who Surrounded 1t in 1806, A special correspondent of the Chicago Times, writing from Cheyenne, says that John Phillips, better known as ‘‘Portu- gose” Phillips,one of the oldest frontiers- men in the west, died on his ranch near that point a few daysago. ‘‘He was brave and daring, and as thoroughly posted in his craft,” writes the correspondent, “‘as any man that ever lived. His brave deeds and daring escapesfrom the Indians would fill & volume. ~ He was the firat man to carry the news of the terrible massacre of Capt. Fetterman and a de- tachment of soldiers a% the old Fort Phil Kearney in 1864, This and many similar exploits gave him great fame. He lived quietly on aTanch well stocked in Wyo- ming territory for some years past.” “Know ‘Portugese’ Phillips?” answer- od an old army officer now residing in this city, last night, when asked the question by a roporter for the Times: ‘“iyes, I have ecaten several meals with him on his ranch on the Chug Water river. He was a great genius, and has since been libeled in ‘Ranch 10’ by the character they call Portugese Joe, though heaven only can testify that the resem. blance is very slight indeed. 1 have heard Phillips TELL ABOUT HIS TRIP from Fort Phil Kearney to Fort Laramie that time. 1 was_also over the same ground in 1876, Just ton years later, ith the Gon, Crook’s command, at tho on the spot where the old Fort Phil Kearney stood, and I stood out on a knoll and gazed at the spot, about one mile away, where those soldicrs were massa. cred. The flag-staff and a portion of tho stockade still stood there, and there was a little hill called Sentinel hill, at the base of which some of the poor fellows who fell, pierced by the deadly Sioux bullet, were buried. At the time this massacre occurred, in the fall of 1866, Col. Carrington commanded the fort. He went weat to that point, about the junc- tion of the Big and Little Pinos rivers and the old Bozeman trail, the year be- foro and established the fort. It was not a desirable location, though being in a space of cleared ground it was not easy for any ordinary band of Indians to cap- ture the fort proper. THE TRAIL LED from Fort Laramie to Fort Reno, thence to Fort Phil Kearney, then up to Fort C. 8. Smith, and on to Bozemen, All these forts except Fort Laramie, have been abandoned long ago. It wound over in a curve te tho west crossing both the Pinos rivers to reach Fort Phil Kear- ney. The barracks and stockade within the fort were directly on the trail, which, after sweeping out south, made another curve about a mile from the fort, just whero a hill and some clmpiplml hid the trail, On the morning of the maesacre hostile Ingdiens had been seen about the country, biftin spitdof this no one thought much about them, and Col. Carrington sent out a small details across the Big Pinos into the chapparal to chop wood. They were surprised by a band ofredskins, mostly Sioux, from {l«d Cloud’s tribe. The fight occurred on the trail, and was in plamn view of the people at the fort. Seeing his men surrounded, and not really knowing how many Indians there were about, Col. Carrington order- ed out a detachment of soldiers under Capt. Fottorman, with Capts. Brown and Grummond and several other officers to their rescue. I think there were over ninety-throe men, ofticers and all, in the detail. . ““Wall, they started out bravely, but not & man of them ever came back to that fort. THE INDIANS very cunningly drew them on along the Bozoman trail south of the fort until they had reached that point about a mile from the fort where I was telling you the trail turned around the little hill and disappeared from view of the fort, and there they wore surrounded by the yel- low demons. After a close, desperate hand-to-hand fight all were slain. All this could be plainly seen from the stockade of the fort, but its inmates could render the poor men no assistance. The Indians must have numbered full three thousand and were on the wurpmj; at the time, crossing over into the Pow- der river region, - They drew the soldiers on along the trail, then swarmed out of the chapparal behind them in a perfect cloud, ~The big Pinos—by the way, that wants (o be pronounced just as though you were spelling it “*Piney”—river at the point opposite the fort was about as wide as our Chicago river at Madison street bridge, but was only about three foet deep. The Indians, after massacre- ing the poor fellows, came on in a cloud to besiege the fort. They wero repulsed at the river, but kept up tho si ge, It looked as though they would starve out the people in the fort. Then it was that Johu Phi the HCOUT AND FRONTIERSMAN, got out of the fort at night and started for Fort Laramio to bear the news of their danger to civilization, &o one outside tho little band penned up in_the fort knew of this terrible massacre. Phil- lips got away in the night, but was pur- sued by the Indians. Ho was a leng time reaching the other fort, and at one timo was nearly lassoed, Before the cuing party could be started Red Cloud marched away and the command left for safety. Col. Carrington was brought up before a military court of inquiry for the massacre, but was acquitted and retired on half pay. 1 guess it was simply post 08si °" Ffly the way, there was a queer inci dent grew out of that massacre, and though not strictly apropos, 1 think it was a good one, Col. Carrington went east aftor the massacre, and Mrs, Grum mond, the widow of the oflicer who was killed, charged him through the press with being the cause of her husband's death, It came down finally to a charge unearly of murder. There was a great deal of talk at the time. Then Mrs Carrington died. Col. Carrington went south afterward, to a town in Tennosser Grummond resided and me THEY LOVED aud were married, Thus Mrs. Grum-. mond became Mras, Carrington No 2, the wife of the ruan she charged with mur- 3 an indivect apuer, her hus band, That was not all. It seems that Capt. Grammond, whose relict married Col. Carrigton, had been married before, and failed to a6 tell his wife. He wasa lawyer in Detroit at the commencement of the war of the rebellion, and went south, He left a wife and child in Detroit. In the southyin the very same village in Tennessee where Col. Carrington wooed and won his sec- ond wife, he met n lady whom he loved and made Mrs. Grummond, His other wife lost all trace of him, and did not know whero he was until the reports came of the massacre at Fort Phil Kear- ney, in 1866. Then she went to claim the body and found wife No. 2. There waa quite a time, bu’ she gave way to the latest. Thus, you sce, all around, «it was a great time. I believe Mra. Col. Car. rington has written several books about this western experience, and she is a very pleasant and ablg writer. Col. Car- rington is living in Washington. “But about ‘Portuguese’ Phillips. After the settlement of the Indian troubles he became staid and sedate, tak- ing unto himeelf a rib in the shape of a tidy American girl, On his ranche on Clug Water river, when I was there, he had a fine dairy and plenty of good cat- tle. He had turned the course of the stream through the garden and was raising water cresses. 1 think he sold this ranche afterward and went fur- ther west to the neighborhood of Chey- enne. That is all I know of him, only that his fame was coextensive throughout the northwest."” . Tooks Honest, A clear, bright open face somohow looks honest. A horso thl(el or burglar seldom car- ries such a face. Burdock Blood Bitters give the skin a peculiarly fine texture and clear- ness, They strengthen and enrich the circu- lation and so eradicate all eruption or blemish, e BREACH OF PROMISE, A Vivacious Young Widow Sucs the “Senator from Dodge" for $10,000, Fremont Tribune, Thursday evening action was begun in the district court in a suit brought by Mrs. Rachel Beers against Charles Sang. The necessary papers wore placed on filo but as they were afterwards allowed to bo taken from the office of the clerk of the court by the plaintifi’s at- torney, in whose possession they have since’ heen. Owing to this fadt an effort is being made to keep the particu- lars a8 secrot as possible until Jw caso actually comes to trial, if it does so, we have not been able to learn complete du- tails of tho case. The fact that action has been commenced renders the case, to that extent; public property, and under the law the petition after once being filed should remain on file, yet it is bet- ter for the partios intercsted and just as well for the public that it is not so. The only ground for the action, so far as we know definitely, is that of breach of promise. ~ The defendant has formore than a year past been paying his respects to the plaintiff, and from the nature of the case it is to be presumed that the lady in question considers that Mr. Sang has been guilty of breaking an agreement of marriage and trifling with her affections, and alleges that the dam- ages incidenv theroto are an even ten thousand dollars. There is a probability that the matter may be dropped or com- premised, but if not, it will not come up for trial before the April term of the dis- trict court. N, H. Bell is attorney for the plaintiff and E. F. Gray for the de- fendant, e —— Tightness in the chestis a forerunner of disease, Samaritan Nervine is the antidote. $1.50. ‘“Every epileptic sufforer ought to try Samaritan Nervine at once,” says Rev. J. T. Etter, of Now Glarus, Wis. * It's a never failing remedy.” Lincoln’s Mon Cincinnati Commerclal-Gazette, SeriNerrFLy, 111, November 22.--He who visits the capital of Illinois without secing that magnificent monument of marble and bronze erected to the memory of the martyred Lincoln, must be devoid of both patriotism and appreciation of beautiful art, The Lincoln Monument, with its truthful bronze statute of Abra- ham Lincoln, heroic size, and its four bronze groups, life size, representing four depactments of the natiou’s defense, isa ruu‘ work of art worthy of more than ordinary interest. Benecath the monu- ment, or rather inside the pedestal, lie the remains of Lincoln, his wife and two children. In another apartment of the same structure is Memorial Hall, a room set apart for the preservation of relics of the dead hero, I entered Memorial Hall yesterday in company with a very feeble old man, who gave me his name as Wil- liam Moro. He is a farmer, and in his foventy-fifth year and his white hair, his long white beard, his tottering,bent form, his trembling voice, seomed fitting ac- companiments to the cemetery whore we met. *‘Here,"” said the guide to us, *‘is the old chain which Lincoln used when he was laying out Potersburg, and here aro his other suyveying instruments.' “Ah, how wu{l 1 remember that old rusty chain,” snid my aged companion, ““I have carried it many a mile for Abe when he was surveying, You see,” said he in answer to ourlooks of surprise, *ho and I used to be old chums, and we worked together in the old mill, and I helped him survey. Poor old ! We were intimate friends for thirty years, Ho was only three or four months older than I, Many & yarn have we spun together, and many a prank have we rluyed together in our young days, but he could always tell a bigger story than 1 could, and it was no use trying to keep up witn him, Oh, there is the picture of the cld log houso where I cast my first vote. It was for Henry Clay, and it was recorded by Abraham Lilu:uin. 1 have cast many a vote for Lincoln, 1 voted for him for the legislature, and twice for rrunidum. 1 nover was 8o shocked in my ife as when 1 heard of his assassination. I would have killed all the rebels in the country then if I had had them in my power, The old man straightened up as ho said this, but after ile continued, as if talking to himself; *Poor Abe! Little did T think, when we were running around together at the age of twenty- three, that I would over see so grand a monument erectod to his memory, And yet ho deserves it all. He was a great and good man, Poor Abe! He deserves ivall.” What a picture was here for a painter or poet! This humble old man, honoring the memory of the intimate friend of his early manhood, Then they walked and talkod together as equals. What an al. nost infinite distance the world sees now hotween theso “‘old chums,” and yet we- thinks if *Honest Old Abe” could have looked down from his man ) in the skies and seen his friend *Bill” More doing honer to his wemory so humbly ind g0 sinceroly it would have bLeen to hiw & m re gra‘eful tribute than all the hronze snd marble statues which the wealth of & loving nation can ever pur- chase, ne| STOCK RAISING. Some Interesting Statistios of ihe Business, A Quarter of a Million Made on $3,000 in Ten Years, “Does grazing on the plains pay? If 80, about what per cont?” This was the question putto a number of stockmen who attended the recont meeting of the Wyoming Stock Growers' association at Cheyenne. The question could be easily answered by pointing to the thousands who have amassed fortunes in the busi. ness in a short time, But, to illvstrate the profits of the business, the following figures will give a general idea: As to the increase of cattle one of the closest ob. servers makes the following calculationon 100 cows in ten years, estimating that 40 per cent of their progeny are heifors, which commence to re-produce at two years of age: 100 cows in the first year drop heifors 40 100 cows in the second year drop heifers.. 40 140 cows in the third year drop heifers. .. 56 180 cows in four years drop heifers........ 72 36 cows in five years drop heifers. .. 808 cows in six years drop heifors 402 cows in seven yoars drop heife »wa in nine years drop heifers ows In ten years drop heifers vissisesieeet 1,498 This, it will be seen is a calculation of only thoe femalo increase. So that the ontire gain of animals in ten years can- not be much short of three thousand. The cost of raising an animal on the plains where it forages its food fromthe govern- ment from its birth to its maturity, at four years is about $5. Supposing the male animal to be worth at its birth §5, and if it is sold in the butcher's market at $40, it is simple enough to understand that there kas bosn a $30 profit on a $10 investment, Howover, out of this must come taxes and death risk. With 100 cows for a starter the net profit in ten years is figured thus: First cost of cows. .. v Three bulls. ... . dxpenses of herding. .. ath risk in ten years. . Taxes...... s Total, ten yoars.. Result, 51,000 cattle at §30......$020,000 41,300 Balance as profit................8888,700 To avoid all dispute on the question of profit, cut this result right in the center, and call it $444,200, and then ask where, on the face of the globe, is there another business outside of stock raising that would pay in ten years a net profit of $444,200 on an investment of $3,000. The profits of sheep-raising nearly equal those of cattle, but the death risk is much greater. The cost of starting a ranch with say 3,000 ewes is as follows: First cost of ewes. , . One hundred and sixty Tmprovements—houses and sheds Sharing sheds and dipping vats. Sufficient merino bucks........ S Ixpenses of herding one year Cost of dipping and sheariug. . ... ... Cost of sacking wool and shipping. ... f Loss by death and otherwise. Interest on investment. .. Total onflAY. ..o caiieniesinisd Three thousand ewes, properly cared for, will ?rodu«:e their equal number in lambs, For those tha% fail to beara lamb there yill be an equal number bear two. To be quicker comprehended, we will give the figures: Three thousand lambs at six months Total earnings .................. $13 500 So, with an outlay of $17,460, the sheep grower has a net carning in one year of $13,500. In the second year he will not have to purchase lands or make improvements and his net earnings will be the same, while his flock will, with orainary luck’ continueblid oung every year, e —— A Good Investment. One of our prominent business men said to us the other day: *‘In the spring my wife got all run down and could not cat anything; passing your store 1 saw a pile of Hood’s Sarsaparilla in the window, and I got a bottle. After she had taken it a week she had a rousing uyputim, and did her everything. She took three bot- tles, and it was the best three dollars 1 ever invested.” C.I. Hoopn & Co., Low- oll, Mass. 0001 tion to strip it from the body of some | glow. The tiger nature that was in them was awakened and their nostrils scented fresh blood, “Now give them h—1!" The voice rang out like the blast of a bugle and as the last word fell from the speaker’s lips a cloud of flamy smoke shot out over the ravine and the crash of our first volley whirled through tho forest. Before it the Confederates wentdown by scores, and through the bluish-gray smoke wo saw them, like phantoms in a mist, wome struggling Lo keep their feet, oth sinking sullenly to the ground while brandishing their pieces as if in defiance and not a few lying quiet and peaceful on the bosom of the earth—dead, In an instant came their response, and I heard shrill cries pierc: clamor, and saw men whom I knew stru; gling convulsively among the dead les ang beating their limbs against the hard, merciless rocks, Wo were kneeling now, hastily biting cartridges, ramming them home, and driving bullets across the narrow space with only one desire—to kill. On the trees little ragged white spots sprang into view where bullets scored their marks, and splinters of stone, to which still adhered tufts of moss, whirled through the air. Shot and shell tore through the woods with pitiless fury, and CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! BETC., new To All Floors. | CELANMBIEE 1206, 1208 Have just received a large quanuity of ST, AND AM OFFERING THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES PASSENGER ELEVATOR |CHAS, SHIVERICK, nd 1210 Farnam St — OMAHA, NEB, here and there a man was lifted bodily from the earth and dashed, a gory bun- dle of mangled flesh and shattered bones, against a rock or tree. But we gave no thought to that. Our business was with the living—the dead needed no human care. For the wounded the stretcher-bearers were there, and their canvas barrows were winding in grisly procession in and out among the rocks, some coming empty, but splashed with humid scarlet blotches; others car- rying out into the sunlight their burdens of moaning humanity. I looked once at Jim. His cap was off and a few drops of blood were trickling down his left cheek and dyeing, with a grim rod, the powder stains about the corners of his mouth and on the chin, His premonition had not yet come true. How long this wild work continued I have no conception, but to the common soldier engaged time is a myth. 1 know my loose cartridges were exhausted and 1 had broken open one of the sealed pack- ages which lay at the bottom of the box, when our fire began to slacken, and upon looking up and down the line I saw the men standing up and fixing bayonets, while the officers were shouting in the helling din something that sounded like “Ceaso firing!” Jim leaned over toward me and called out: “It’s a charge!” Our line was sadly thined, and, as the men stood up, at their feet lay so many of out dead! Our other messmate had gone down, and his body lay stretched across a low rock. In the moment be- fore we started Jim picked up a blouse which had been discarded y some sol- dier, and reverently spread it over the face of our dead comrade. I looked up at the sun, now throwing its slanting glare through the leaves of the shivered trees, and, asmy eye rested on the ground at the rear, I saw Dad’s form out- lined against an immense bowlder. In one hand he carried our coffec-kettle, and in the other a gorgeous red sash, the glaring tint of which had probably so ap- pealed to the instincts of his barbaric na- ture that he could not resist the tempta- dead officer. There was no fear in his face; on the contrary, when I called Jim'’s attontion to him and he looked up, he laughed outright, and moved forward, Jim waived him back with his hand, and we turned to the front. / Across the ravine a ragged cloud of smoke streamed out and up, concealing from us the movements of the confeder- ates, but as the thundering roll of our Tor §al FO 1 Granite Ironware. BROILING, BAKING, BOILING, PRESERVING, IS WESEEND S OME, DURABLE. The Best Ware Made for the Kitchen. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE ST, LOUIS STAMPING GOMPANY, ST. LOUIS. b hvall St_@'r Hardwars, and Housefurnishing Dealers. <. ST Cor. 9th Stroet and Capitol Avenue? Anheuser-Busch .. BREWING ASSOCIATION CELEBRATED ' Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks fcr itself. ¥ ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, :ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO OfOurG-uarantee. Promptly Shipped. THESTANDARD F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West, =R AND B | W SR ooth’s "Oval FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. D. B. BEEMER, Agent,Omaha. own fire had ceased we could hear the venomous hiss of their bullets as they flew above and around us. ** We can’t do it,” said Jim in my ear; | “ we're too light-handed for what there | is over there.” Jefore I could say a word the order came: * Forward, march !" And as we got under way on the brink of the slope and looked down into the ravine, now rolling up smoke as if it were one of the openings of the pit of hell, came the thrilling command, “Charge !" o ——— Horsford's Acid Phosphate FOR ALCOHOLISM, Dr. C. 8. Erus, Wabash, Ind., says: “I proscribed it for a man who had used intoxicants to excess for fifteen years, but during the last two years has entirely ab- stained. Ho thinks the Acid Phosphate is of much benelit to him."” | —omm— 'A CHARGE. The Evening of the Second Day at Gettysburg, Cor. Chicago News. I looked up and down fhe line, and noticed that while muny faces were white and teeth were set hard to conceal what the tremulous lip might betray, nobody looked to the rear. The weak-kneed had fallen out before, and every man on the brow of that little rock-strewn hill could be depended on to give a good account of himself when the deadly wrestle came. And it was not long delayed. Above the clamor of the guns and the crash of shot smiting and shattering the quivering trunks of the trees, there came from the immediate front the sounds of indescrib- able tumult, and the sharp rattle of our skirmish line rang through the woods, “Giot ready, boys! They're coming!” I think it must have beon the voice of our colonel, who stood a few paces in our rear, and the words were so quietly utter- tered that they seemed addressed to each individual man I thought they were spoken within a foot of my ear, Every man stood up, and the clicking of a thousand gun-locks rose clear and distinet over the waves of sound which rolled along the air, A violent commotion in the bushos across the ravine marked the retrograde move- ment of our skirmishers, and in a mo- ment they came into view, while behind them the undergrowth was crushed flat by the gray confederate lines following 5o swiftly on their retreating footste ps. *‘Hold your fire until the skirmish line gots out of the way!” The voice was quiet still, but there was wstern ring in it that told of the sup- pressed oxcitement in the apeaker. Here and there one of the skirmishers was flying at his greatest speed, but the greater number were fulling back with their faces to the front, loadingand firing as they moved to the rear. *‘One—two—three lines of battle!" ex claimed one of the boys, looking over at the mass of butternuts which came surg- ing through the woods; ‘‘that weans business boys!"” Down into the ravine swarmed the shirmishers, aud the ground was clear for astion, Men's eyes were lit up by o — Army Orders, Ofticial notification having been received from’ the headquarters of the army, of 2d Lieutenant Charles Dyrne, 6th In- fantry, (company ¥.,) to lst lieutenant (company C,) vico groesbeck appointed adjutant, he will report for duty with his company. The following named recruits enlisted at Forts Omahs, Nebraska, and D. A, Russell, Wyoming, are assigned as fol- ows: Willam N. Handy and Emile F., Monnier, to the 4th infantry. Albert Ames, to company E, 9th infantry, Ro- bert Furlong, to comgany K, i4th in- fantry. Privato Gustav Bendorfl, re-enlisted at Fort Omaha, Neb., is assigned to the Nunth infantry, and will be sent to the station of his regiment on the first favor- able opportunity. Private John J. Gillady re-enlisted at Fort D. A. Rnssell, Wyo., is assigned to company C, Fourteonth infantry. The following named recruits enlisted at Fort Douglus, Utan, are assigned as | — Goughs, Colds, and . Dougls & Sons’ Caps wre-Throat viold readily toB am Cough Dropa, 18 U'VIFAIVLIVIQM nn» INFALLIBLE <WEvER Fa 1% cuming Epileptic Fits, | n l“ Spasm, Falling v Sickness, Conyul- elons, 8t, Vitus Dance, Alcoholism, Opiam Fating, Seminal Weakness, Im- potency, Byphilis, Scrofuls, and all Nervous and Blood Diseases. = ‘o Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Merchants, Baikers, Ladles and all ‘whose sedentary em) ent causes Nervous Pros tration, Trregulurities of the blood, stomach, 78, or Wwho require a nerve tonle, appetizer or stimulent, Sumarian Ner vin l¢ invaluable. B o nenads @m proclaim 1t the most wonderful I “or- aut that ever sustain- ed o siuking system, $1.50, at Diruggists. TheDR. §. 3. RICHHOND, MEDICAL 0., Solo Pro- the battle light and checks that had been white now shone with a feverish smtews St t0scah. Mo Lowest follows: Edward James to company D, SNAnAnnn G N SR e ow: Sixth Infanty; John Fitzgerald o cow- | 100 up; Fi pany G, Sixth Iufantry, Valetios, Panels, 10¢ Silver Paint, Oils, Varnishes, from 25c up. g MANUFPACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS , BU00iEs, Waann AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1819 and 1320 Hamey Street and’ 403 S.118th Stroet, ustrased Catalogue furnished free uponapplicatian . —~OMABA, NEB Double and Single Acting Power and Hand Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail, AND SCHOOL BELLS, PUMPS, STEAM PUMES, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Bolting, Hose, Bruss and Iron Fittings} HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. c upward; Can A. HOSPE, Jr., MANUFACTUKER OF FINK My Ropository 1 constantly fillod with & seloc: jatock. CUTI" IR A TS, Prices Now:* Cffered on Artist’s s, per dozen, 90¢; Fino Sable Drushes from o Bristol Brushes, from 7o up; Round and Oval Plaques, from 20¢ up; Jups, 10¢; Japaned Tin Artist's Boves, §1.50; Brnss Plagues, 4de up; Wooden Plaque, 15¢; Designs to Decorate, from le each up De per yard; S uth 8idd Dodge A B, DALY EY, Diaterials ! sold and chers, reet. Bggies Carriazes aud Svring Wagons Hest Workianahip guarantoed, SWIHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capirtol Avenue, Omah ~ J. A, WAKEFIELD, Lmber, Lath, Shingles, Piekets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILW | Near Union Pacific Depot, - L) AUKERE EMENT COMPANY. OMAHA, NEB A

Other pages from this issue: